PREVIOUS NEXT NEW SEARCH

The Evolution of the Conservation Movement, 1850-1920


Click here to see the full text of this document.
Click here to view the images of this document using the page image viewer.

Discovery of the Yosemite, and the Indian war of 1851, which led to that event. By Lafayette Houghton Bunnell ...

Bunnell, Lafayette Houghton, 1824-1903.

CREATED/PUBLISHED
3d ed., rev. and cor.
New York, Chicago, F.H. Revell company [c1892]

SUMMARY
American Memory note: Lafayette Houghton Bunnell (1824-1903) was a member of the Mariposa Battalion that became the white discoverers of the Yosemite Valley in 1851 when they rode out in search of Native American tribal leaders involved in recent raids on American settlements. Dr. Bunnell later served as a surgeon in the Civil War. Discovery of the Yosemite, and the Indian war of 1851 (1880) contains his account of that event, beginning with the history of the battalion and the tribal unrest that inspired its creation. He goes on to chronicle the unit's march from its camp near Agua Fria into the mountains down the South Fork of the Merced River. Bunnell recalls his comrades' reactions to the natural grandeur they encountered in the Yosemite Valley as well as the trivia of camp life and encounters with the native tribes they were sent to pacify. The book concludes with chapters of the Valley's history after 1851, discussions of the region's flora and fauna, and a chapter on the discovery of the sequoias and their later exploitation.

SUBJECTS
Yosemite Valley.
Pacific coast Indians, Wars with,--1847-1865.
Indians of North America--California.
Ethnic groups--California
Law and politics--California
Exploration, surveys, and guidebooks--California

MEDIUM
12, 349 (i.e. 359) p. front. (port.) illus., plates, double map. 21 cm.

CALL NUMBER
F868.Y6 B9

DIGITAL ID
amrvg vg20

PREVIOUS NEXT NEW SEARCH